NEIGHBOURS: Grove Lodge, left, and Admiral’s House with a shipdeck roof
DEVASTATION: The Gardiners’
lounge after the ceiling collapsed
Ceiling caves in on
Mary Poppins home
And owners blame the ‘iceberg’ basement
extension in Forsyte Saga house next door
THE owners of an 18th Century
mansion immortalised in Mary
Poppins have blamed council plan-
ners for the collapse of their ceiling
after a neighbour was allowed to
build a huge basement extension.
John and Pascal Gardiner – who
own Admiral’s House, the fictional
residence of author P. L. Travers’s
eccentric character Admiral Boom
- had opposed plans by City finan-
cier Caspar Berendsen to add a
gym, two bedrooms and a playroom
to his Grove Lodge home.
But despite the support of other
residents in Hampstead, North
London – including actor Tom Conti,
who said it was ‘inhumane to inflict
this dreadful noise and everything
else connected to such excavation
on people living nearby’ – Camden
Council approved the scheme.
Now the Gardiners claim work
on Grove Lodge, a Grade II listed
property where John Galsworthy
wrote The Forsyte Saga, caused
their ceiling to cave in last month.
The Gardiners say they woke to
discover rubble and plaster litter-
ing their lounge. Mr Gardiner, 73,
a tax barrister who was recovering
from an operation, estimates that
repairs will cost £100,000.
The towering house, which has a
shipdeck-themed roof, inspired the
Mary Poppins author to include in
her books a retired naval officer
called Admiral Boom who fires a
cannon from the house that was rec-
reated by Disney for the 1964 film.
Cracks began to appear around
the house as soon as construction
of the basement started, said Mr
Gardiner. He also claimed that the
type of sand surrounding the build-
ing was unsuitable for such a large
basement. He added: ‘Camden
Council had a new surveyor giving
them advice who said, “They’re
building basements all over Lon-
don.” But the geology here is
completely different to the rest of
London. We’re sitting on Bagshot
sands that sit on London clay –
the rest of London is London clay.’
Galsworthy lived at Grove House
from 1918 until his death in 1933. It
features in three paintings by 19th
Century artist John Constable of
the Hampstead Heath area, includ-
ing a view of Admiral’s House.
A spokesman for Camden Council
said it would launch an ‘enforce-
ment investigation’ to examine the
quality of the construction work.
Mr Berendsen said surveyors
representing both parties are meet-
ing ‘to establish the facts and appor-
tion responsibility’, adding: ‘We
are very sorry about the Gardiners’
ceiling. Of course we will take our
responsibility but due process
needs to be followed.’
REMAKE: In the 1964 Mary Poppins film
By Sophie Cockerham
and Jonathan Bucks
ALAMY / DISNEY
September 1 • 2019 The Mail on Sunday^ V1 47